We know that the Russian Federation, created after the dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991, still stands with its 85 federal subjects and a population of 150 million. The People’s Republic of China, proclaimed on 1 October 1949 by Mao Zedong’s Chinese Communist Party, remains the world’s second‑most‑populated country with about 1.5 billion people.
The problem is right there! The world, until yesterday morning, seemed to have risen from Trump’s threat that “Iran would be bombed so thoroughly that no trace of civilization would remain,” yet it was impossible to understand whether these two superpowers are still existing or not. From the Russia Today headline “How close is the Middle East to a nuclear disaster?” we see that Russia is aware of the “war that the US and Israel are waging against Iran” and that “this war could render a large part of the region uninhabitable.” By condemning, together with Russia, the Security Council resolution that legitimises Bahrain’s US‑Israeli aggression and blames Iran as the sole cause of the war as a “shameful initiative,” we also understand that China is still following the events.
What was the only difference between the countries that voted in favour of that resolution – the United Kingdom, France, Greece and Sierra Leone – and the veto‑casting ones? Was it the veto itself? More than a social‑media rumor about Russia giving Iran the weapons and radar data that could shoot down US and Israeli aircraft, one might have expected a figure like Pakistan’s Prime Minister Shahbaz Sharif and Marshal Asim Munir, who tried to suspend Trump’s threat, to appear. Trump claimed that, thanks to the efforts of those two Pakistani officials, Iran accepted a new ten‑point agreement and postponed the decision to eradicate civilization in Iran.
During my last trip I saw that there is hardly any civilised heritage left in Iran; the “mullahs” have turned a 5 000‑year‑old Persian and Islamic civilisation into something considerably older in just 45 years, creating a hopeless, lifeless mass of people. Yet, in response to Trump’s threat, the Iranian people formed human shields around likely nuclear‑energy and petro‑chemical facilities, key intersections and public buildings, showing the Russian and Chinese heads of state, as well as the members of the now‑defunct “EU” that pretends to sell civilisation to the world, what the real situation is.
The Iranian people are not the slaves of a regime that, as Trump claims, manufactures atomic bombs to destroy the whole Middle East and US‑allied countries, nor are they the victims of Israel’s genocidal Zionists. Trump, in order to “make them kneel,” sent many weapons to Iran, but the separatist Kurds seized those weapons and did not hand them over to the protesters! Those nonsensical statements turned the human shields the Iranians built yesterday into a complete waste.
Iran’s Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi also said that there is no new ten‑point plan; from the first day he has said that if the Israeli and American attacks stop, both the Hormuz Strait and the Persian Gulf would be open. What his mediators – son‑in‑law Kushner and crypto‑currency partner Witkoff – understood and how accurately they conveyed it is unknown; but Iran repeats the same statement today as on 28 February: “We have no plan to acquire nuclear weapons; we can cut support to Hamas, Hezbollah and the Houthis.”
So we are back at the beginning: the two countries returned to the point of holding two‑month talks and reaching an agreement, as mentioned in Trump’s letter to Iran’s Supreme Leader Ali Hamaney dated 12 April 2025. However, at that time Israel attacked Iran before the deadline expired, while talks were still ongoing, dragging Trump into war.
Will Trump fall into the same Zionist trap this time? Or will Russia and China step in and at least inform Trump about Netanyahu’s plans?






